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The medicine cabinet was built into the wall, so the blades just dropped down inside the wall. After my grandparents were gone, we remodeled the house and there was quite a pile of them in the bottom of the wall.

Time Space Continuom problems again Cap’n Kirk: If these events have been going on for a couple weeks now, and comic books are the objective of the Jumbler, then how did the Jumbler know about the comic books prior to the owner of Old Finlay’s Pharmacy?

I agree with Mikeyj, this is just too Batman-ish.

If this story is just a bridge until we get to the Moon Maid, I’m ready to take the ferry!

Way, way back, when I was a little tyke and the US was still in post-war (WW II) mode, there was a neighborhood candy/ice cream/comic book store that I would dash over to if I had a dime, hoping to buy the latest monthly issue of my favorite comic book (whatever that might be at any given moment). I lusted after the unsold ones I couldn’t afford; don’t know if they were returned to the publisher or (more likely) scrapped (which would be why I found the process so frustrating).We shall soon see if the MCU gets to Old Finley’s in time to foil the Jumbler, or if he escapes them with the comic booty (perhaps using his tear gas)….

Here I thought comics were “stripped” and the unsold covers returned—like Paperbacks. (If you find a used paperback without a cover it was likely a return, and not to be sold as the author and publishers didn’t get their royalties.)

As to Jumbler knowing about it early, Newspapers are printed well after the fact. So Jumbler may know a Huggy Bear type “Word on the street is…” or have an insider at the paper as a friend.

As a fan of Batman, I am offended by that remark! Stop being a hater. (No offense.)^^I like Batman, it’s just the whole “Criminal robs something with his name in it” belongs in Batman, whereas it seems somewhat out of place in Dick Tracy

About Dick Tracy

Created by Chester Gould in 1931, "Dick Tracy" is one of America's most-enduring pop-cultural icons, noteworthy for its steadfast, chisel-jawed hero and the gruesome gallery of villains he and his fearless team of Crimestoppers must outwit to put behind bars.

When longtime "Dick Tracy" artist and writer Dick Locher retired from the strip after 32 years of meritorious service, fans Staton and Curtis jumped at the chance to don the yellow fedora and trench coat. Staton has been drawing comic books for many years and has more than 1,000 credits under his belt. Curtis, who has been writing comics since 1986, is the only former law-enforcement officer to work on "Dick Tracy." Both creators are excited about the new--and dangerous--adventures they have in store for Dick Tracy and his Crimestoppers.